It's not about people making piles of money. Probably, these people are plant scientists who spend part of their career on rhododendron indicum and similar. And since these are native species to Japan and they are horticultural relevant, there's academic incentives to do research on them. There's a few professors in Japan who during the years did some research on satsuki and other evergreen azaleas. Not sure what they spend most of their careers on.
But since there is a group in Belgium doing research on evergreen azaleas, one in Italy, one in Vietnam, one in Taiwan, and a couple in China, they have got the needed citations of their papers.
So that's the main incentive. They contributed to the knowledge. They did I believe eight papers on the evergreen x R. japonicum hybrids and they got 30, 24, 56, 37, 38, 26 and 21 citations, or something like that.
The albinism observed in these specific hybrids is apparently a wider phenomenon for all wide hybrids and the relationship between chromosomal and plastid DNA is relevant for plant evolution in general.
There's a handful of people worldwide who have read these papers and are doing wide crosses in the rhododendron genus.
In fact, we are discussing this paper right now in 2023 on a bonsai discussion board. So that proves the relevance, in a way. Even though no new cultivars seemed to have been produced.
Oryu was produced by Masao Oide who registered a ton of other satsuki cultivars. If you look at your dictionary and scan for 大出昌男 in the leftmost column, you see his name a lot.
I believe is an amateur enthusiast and not a researcher or a professional grower. But if you research him, there's a video of him walking through a garden in autumn. But nothing about satsuki. So maybe he had his hands in many things.
His patent for Oryu in the US was with Suntory Flowers Ltd. But they don't seem to sell satsuki. At least not at the moment. And certainly not in the US.
Senbazuru was done by 黒相惇 which should be Jun Kurosou. Doesn't appear in the resaerch papers either.
I mention both because both were products of deliberate hybridization where the parent plants were never registered and because both are yellowish following the theory that a certain mutation prevents yellow colours from disappearing. And the long-lasting flower mutation prevents both choloroplast and chromoplast pigments, namely chlorophyll and carotenoids, from being broken down.
And the grandparent of Oryu is R. macrosepalum 'Kocho-zoroi', which is mentioned in the research papers. And it has the same mutation as Chojuho, and thus also Senbazuru.
So one theory why Oryu is more yellowish is that it doesn't break down all pigmentation (either carotenoids of flavonoids) that would be present in leaves but not in flower petals.
But there's no actual research paper on Oryu and no direct links I know between the people that did the research and the people that registered these two cultivars. But that's the closest link I know of. Could very well that these people were talking to each other or knew of the research.
But no hybrids between Rhododendron japonicum f. flavum and evergreen azaleas that I know of. That said, it maybe wouldn't appear in the satsuki dictionary. But Oryu kinda ought not to be included there either, I would say.
So I can't say for sure that no such plant was ever registered and produced in Japan. Say as a kurume type. I am not really aware of what is going on in the kurume-section in Japan.
I just spoke to a woman last week who told me she had been to Kurume to visit the azalea nursery at the kurume research centre there, and that there wasn't a lot going on. And that it seemed that most of it was shut down.
There is a big decline that has happened in Japan for both satuski and other azaleas like kurume. In part because of the aging population and because of the shift to other hobbies and interests.